plastic recycling Archives - The Sacred Groves https://www.sacredgroves.earth/blog/tag/plastic-recycling/ Sat, 08 Oct 2022 07:19:19 +0000 en-US hourly 1 https://wordpress.org/?v=6.8.1 https://www.sacredgroves.earth/blog/wp-content/uploads/2020/10/facicon.png plastic recycling Archives - The Sacred Groves https://www.sacredgroves.earth/blog/tag/plastic-recycling/ 32 32 The Monk With a Mission https://www.sacredgroves.earth/blog/the-monk-with-a-mission/ https://www.sacredgroves.earth/blog/the-monk-with-a-mission/#respond Thu, 28 Jan 2021 14:34:26 +0000 http://www.sacredgroves.earth/blog/?p=1282 The acting head abbot of Chak Daeng Temple near Bangkok has a unique mission — to convert the polluted city’s waste plastic into robes for his fellow monks! Meet Phra Mahapranom Dhammalangkaro, the acting abbot of Chak Daeng Temple near Bangkok. Building upon a 2,600-year tradition started by Buddha himself, who encouraged ordained monks to …

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The acting head abbot of Chak Daeng Temple near Bangkok has a unique mission — to convert the polluted city’s waste plastic into robes for his fellow monks! Meet Phra Mahapranom Dhammalangkaro, the acting abbot of Chak Daeng Temple near Bangkok. Building upon a 2,600-year tradition started by Buddha himself, who encouraged ordained monks to fashion their robes out of cloth from scrap heaps and graveyards — he helps process 10 tonnes of plastic waste every month into monks’ robes!

Phra Mahapranom Dhammalangaro, Abbot of Chak Deang Temple stands inside the recycling centre of the temple.

In 2005, when Dhammalangkaro moved to Bangkok to teach Buddhism and manage Chak Daeng’s temple grounds, he found it full of garbage. Back then, plastic waste there was either burnt or thrown in River Chao Phraya. Sadly, this resulted in severe pollution in the river, contributing to the loss of marine life, poisoning of aquifers and the uncontrolled growth of algae. Burning plastic also resulted in severe air pollution. About eleven years ago, he visited Tzu Chi Foundation in Taiwan to study plastic recycling and saw how they were able to make shirts, trousers, bags and more from recycled plastic. Thus, the idea of making monastic robes from recycled plastic was born.

Today, he and other monks in the monastery sift through all the plastic waste they receive from neighbouring areas. This plastic is compressed into bales and shipped to the factory where it is converted into fibre and eventually woven into monastic robes.

Monks attest that the fabric is easy to wash, doesn’t smell or crease and is light on skin. Their novel recycling enterprise has employed over 30 local villagers, including some that are differently abled. Most of all, it is keeping some plastic from being thrown in the Chao Phraya river, one of the most polluted water sources in Thailand. For the monks of course, their clean up and recycling project has a spiritual aspect: “We need to clean material waste out, as well as cleaning the waste in the brain, and then, we will find true happiness,” the abbot says.

Image Story

At the end of every day Buddhist monks from Chak Deang Temple will bring garbage produced by the temples activities to the recycling centre so that it can be recycled.
For over a decade this unique Thai Buddhist temple just outside Bangkok called Wat Chak Daeng has pursued ways to recycle waste particularly plastics. Under the guidance of Phra Mahapranom Dhammalangaro the temple has recycled everything from food waste to plastic bottles and began inviting people to join in their recycling activities to raise awareness about how people can recycle waste in every day life.
From humble beginnings the temple started to attract attention when it began a project that recycled plastic bottles turning them in to saffron coloured monks robes which it continues to do today. Now, it receives daily deliveries of plastic bottles from across the country which adds up to 10 tonnes per month which it then recycles to make the robes and other clothing items.
At the recycling centre, located in the grounds of the temple, over 10 tonnes of plastic bottles are sent and delivered each month. They are separated, cleaned, sorted and ultimately crushed in to bales by a team of volunteers. These ‘bales’ are then sent to a factory and recycled, part of which are turned in to orange monks robes.
A volunteers empties donated plastic bottles, already separated and cleaned, in to a compacting machine that will produce a large ‘bale’ of crushed bottles. This will then be sent off to a factory for recycling and being made in to monks robes amongst other things.
After having sent compressed plastic bottles to a factory to be recycled in to orange cloth, a small team of women sew the material in to monks robes at the sewing centre inside the temple grounds. Here a monk inspects the material.

Author: The India Story Agency for Sacred Groves
Images Credit: Luke Duggleby

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Africa’s Queen of Recycling? That makes me happy … https://www.sacredgroves.earth/blog/africas-queen-of-recycling-ill-take-that/ https://www.sacredgroves.earth/blog/africas-queen-of-recycling-ill-take-that/#respond Fri, 04 Dec 2020 11:42:27 +0000 http://www.sacredgroves.earth/blog/?p=297 From humble origins in rural Gambia to saving Africa’s natural environment and creating social change, one handbag at a time… “How many lives has this purse saved?” says Isatou Ceesay, 48, toting a pretty, pale blue woven handbag. Raised in Njau, a humble village in The Gambia, from a young age Ceesay was struck by …

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From humble origins in rural Gambia to saving Africa’s natural environment and creating social change, one handbag at a time…

“How many lives has this purse saved?” says Isatou Ceesay, 48, toting a pretty, pale blue woven handbag.

Raised in Njau, a humble village in The Gambia, from a young age Ceesay was struck by the environmental degradation caused by the overuse and poor disposal of waste. The rivers in her rural region of the West African state were clogged with plastic bags, with the burning or dumping of toxic waste leading to a host of health implications for her fellow villagers, from respiratory illnesses to cholera, as well as sickening the livestock communities depended upon.

“The idea of recycling came to me very young, when I looked at the environment I lived in and people didn’t have the idea of taking care of their waste, “Ceesay says. “People were simply not aware of what I was talking about.” But Ceesay had social barriers to overcome in making the villagers understand the benefits of good environmental custodianship. “I was very young, I lacked money and I was uneducated,” Ceesay says. “But one thing I did have was commitment.” Plus, she adds, with a smile: “I wanted to prove them all wrong.”

Isatou Ceesay – The Queen of Waste Plastic

What a difference two decades make. Today Ceesay’s revolutionary community recycling project, Njau Recycling and Income Generation Group (NRIGG), employs 1,100 people in four separate communities in the Gambia. The project proceeds on the basis that many of the items that are poorly disposed of by Gambian communities have reuse value. Using novel crafting methods, NRIGG employs marginalised women to make recycled bags, mats, purses and jewellery for resale at markets or via the charity’s site from reclaimed items, including plastic bags, and the plastic bottles that are the scourge of local waterways. The organisation also trains unemployed women to be community waste and recycling experts, training villagers in composting and recycling, kitchen gardening and the societal benefits in planting trees. This advocacy work, Ceesay says, has improved child and maternal weight and wellbeing in the communities her organisation works with. “When I return to a village and see there are vegetables growing, the environment is clean and nutrition has improved, that’s the best thing for me,” Cessay says.

NRIGG is now turning its attention to forest preservation, perfecting a simple method of making compacted cooking fuel from discarded kindling and coconut shells to prevent deforestation for charcoal. “This is important,” Ceesay says. “Without forests we cannot have a healthy life.”

For Ceesay, social justice goes hand-in-hand with good environmental stewardship. “If women and young people are not part of this work it will not have a future,” she says. She has recently launched a project that gives recycling work to disabled Gambian women who otherwise have little option but to beg. “They are some of the best workers we have,” she says, “but society sees them as having no worth.” Now Ceesay’s dream is to see more women taking leadership positions in African countries. “That is something we are really lacking,” Cessay says.

Apart from Ceesay, of course. In 2012, the environmental trailblazer was recognised with an award at The International Alliance for Women Difference Maker award in the USA. In her homeland, she’s popularly nicknamed the Queen of Recycling, a moniker she doesn’t mind one bit. “When I wake up every day I still have the heart to deliver a better life,” she says.

Isatou Ceesay was photographed for Climate Heroes, a documentary series about the women and men around the world who fight to protect our environment and mitigate climate change, climateheroes.org.

Learn how to recycle plastic bags into purses with Njau Recycling’s technique: Watch Here
Buy their creations at  One Plastic Bag

Author: The India Story Agency for Sacred Groves

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